Product OverviewIntroducing the MasterFan Pro seriesMasterFan Pro RGB series provides a specific air cooling solution ideally for CPU coolers and chassis in-take fans. Designed for Builders with RGB-enabled PCs, you can feel the flow with full color fun and perfectly match your PC's theme. The MasterFan Pro series is fitted with multiple layers of our exclusive noise reduction technologies and a perfect blend of fan blade design that together work in harmony to cool your entire case and its components in silence.

Designed from the SkiesFan blade design inspired by helicopters. They move the air less distance but pack more force into the space in front of the fan.

Introducing the RGB LED ControllerThe RGB LED Controller, together with Cooler Master software, allows you to take full control of your rig's lighting and take it to the next level. Take advantage of countless combinations of colors and lighting effects, from presets to full customization. Have the PC lighting you want without an RGB capable motherboard. This compact controller easily fits inside your case. It can conveniently attach to any metallic surface with its built in magnet. Features
• 3 manual colour profiles via switch.• Jam protection.• Noise absorption.• High airflow.• RGB.

The modern PC is potentially a mass of heat output and heat production hot spots. With CPUs rated at more than 100W of heat output, single graphics boards carrying similar ratings (and people want to run two!), multiple hard drives the norm, lots of memory and mainboards covered in heatpipes to combat toasty core logic and PWM circuits, a PC appreciably warming up a room when it’s working hard is no joke.

Watercooling for the PC has been around for years in some form or another, for at least as long as Scan have been in business, with basic physics defining why you want to use it. That means for air cooling, to cope with increasing temperature in the heatsink you need to move the air across it faster. That is why thermostatically controlled fans in your PC will turn faster the hotter something gets.

Anybody who has been near their share of computer systems will appreciate that not all systems make the same amount of noise. There are a number of reasons for why this is so. Firstly, a computer makes noise for different reasons. Generally, anything mechanical is going to make noise.